Henrikki Almusa wrote:
2. The documentation suggests changing qualifier from '=' to '>', but it
neglects to tell me why or what alternatives there are. Any
documentation on that?

Hi Henrikki,

I'm not the expert, but as far as I got it any SQL qualifier can be used. So: =, >, <, !=, in, like are the most common ones.


I tried to run it with sudo or as root. Eventually I figured that it
tried to resolve unix user above from '/etc/passwd', which obviously
will fail. So adding following row to httpd.conf fixed this

User www-data

www-data is user defined in system (at least on kubuntu and most likely
on ubuntu).

Yes, if you're using your system-wide apache that's the way to go.

The configurator generates an httpd.conf for when you're using with your own user. Probably, as your user didn't have write permission on /var/www it failed.

If you had started your apache manually like:

$ apache2 -d ~/biomart -f conf/httpd.conf

it should work with your user (and with the generated config file).


cheers,
--renato

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